4.1 Article

Butterflies on the brink: identifying the Australian butterflies (Lepidoptera) most at risk of extinction

Journal

AUSTRAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 98-110

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aen.12525

Keywords

anthropogenic mass extinction crisis; biodiversity conservation; conservation management; Delphi; expert elicitation; IDEA; insect decline; IUCN Red List; key threatening processes

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Government through the National Environmental Science Program's Threatened Species Recovery Hub

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The diversity and abundance of native invertebrates globally are declining, with significant consequences for ecosystem functioning. Despite some well-studied species in Australia, few butterfly taxa are explicitly listed for protection, highlighting the need for research and management actions to prevent extinction. The most prevalent threats affecting the considered taxa are inappropriate fire regimes, habitat loss and fragmentation, invasive species, and climate change, requiring increased resourcing and management intervention to avoid extinctions.
The diversity and abundance of native invertebrates is declining globally, which could have significant consequences for ecosystem functioning. Declines are likely to be at least as severe as those observed for vertebrates, although often are difficult to quantify due to a lack of historic baseline data and limited monitoring effort. The Lepidoptera are well studied in Australia compared with other invertebrates, so we know that some species are imperilled or declining. Despite this, few butterfly taxa are explicitly listed for protection by legislation. Here we aim to identify the butterfly taxa that would most benefit from listing by determining the Australian butterflies at most immediate risk of extinction. We also identify the research and management actions needed to retain them. For 26 taxa identified by experts and various conservation schedules, we used structured expert elicitation to estimate the probability of extinction within 20 years (i.e. by 2040) and to identify key threatening processes, priority research and management needs. Collation and analysis of expert opinion indicated that one taxon, the laced fritillary (Argynnis hyperbius inconstans), is particularly imperilled, and that four taxa (Jalmenus eubulus, Jalmenus aridus, Hypochrysops piceatus and Oreisplanus munionga larana) have a moderate-high (>30%) risk of extinction by 2040. Mapped distributions of the 26 butterflies revealed that most are endemic to a single state or territory, and that many occupy narrow ranges. Inappropriate fire regimes, habitat loss and fragmentation (through agricultural practices), invasive species (mostly through habitat degradation caused by weeds and rabbits) and climate change were the most prevalent threats affecting the taxa considered. Increased resourcing and management intervention will be required to prevent these extinctions. We provide specific recommendations for averting such losses.

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